WEBVTT PROVIDE 80-MILLION DOLLARS TO THE NEW ALBANY-FLOYD COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT. THE MONEY WAS GOING TO FUND NEW SCHOOLS - AND HELP PROVIDE IMPROVEMENTS TO OTHERS. NOW THE BIG QUESTION IS WHERE THE DISTRICT GOES FROM HERE. WLKY'S ANN BOWDAN HAS MORE. "It' could've gone either way is what my thought process was really." BUT VOTERS IN FLOYD COUNTY SAID NO TO AN 80- MILLION DOLLAR REFERENDUM TO FUND NEW SCHOOLS AND REPAIR OTHERS IN THE NEW ALBANY-FLOYD COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT. THE FINAL VOTE - 55- PERCENT AGAINST AND 45 PERCENT IN FAVOR. "I'm a little disappointed. Not shocked. It's politics after all, money, there are reason you don't hear about, and you don't get the full story and it's voting." FUNDS FROM THE REFERENDUM WOULD HAVE GONE TOWARD BUILDING A NEW GREEN VALLEY ELEMENTARY AND SLATE RUN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL... AS WELL AS A COMPLETE RENOVATION AT THE PROSSER CAREER EDUCATION CENTER. ADDITIONAL FUNDS WOULD HAVE GONE FOR IMPROVEMENTS OF FLOYDS KNOBS ELEMENTARY AND GREENVILLE ELEMENTARY. SOME OPPONENTS THOUGHT THE PRICE TAG WAS EXCESSIVE - INCLUDING P-J MOORE WITH THE GREENVILLE CONCERNED CITIZENS INC. P.J. Moore/Greenville Concerned Citizens, Inc.: We're not against education. We're not against spending money. We want the money spent on teachers and kids, not a few lucky builders and attorneys. Our thing is books not bricks, teachers not teachers lounges. WHERE THE DISTRICT GOES FROM HERE IS UNKNOWN AT THIS POINT. DEPUTY SUPERINTENDENT BRAD SNYDER RELEASED THIS STATEMENT. "WE ARE VERY DISAPPOINTED WITH LAST NIGHT'S ELECTION RESULTS. HOWEVER, THE NEED FOR OUR STUDENTS HAS NOT GONE AWAY. THE POOR PHYSICAL LEARNING ENVIRONMENT FOR OUR STUDENTS IN THESE BUILDINGS WILL HAVE TO BE SOLVED. WE INTEND TO TAKE SOME TIME TO REFLECT AND SEE IF WE CAN DEVELOP A PLAN WHICH WILL APPEAL TO THE SUPPORTERS AND CITIZENS OF FLOYD COUNTY AS WELL AS TAXPAYERS." ANN BOWDAN, WLKY NEWS. KENTUCKY ELECTION OFFICIALS APPROVE AN